• Mossy Feathers (She/They)
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    6 months ago

    This is a real world example of a question I’ve always had: if someone attempts to bribe you by giving you money up-front with the promise of more later, but, like in this instance, you turn around and report it, do you get to keep the money after reporting the attempted bribe?

    The article says they handed it over to police (I’m assuming as evidence of a crime), but I’m wondering if there’s any legal precedent for them getting the money back after the trial is over. It seems like it’d be advantageous to allow people to keep the money in cases like this.

    If you’re forced to relinquish the money, then there’s an incentive for the juror to keep the money (at the risk of criminal charges) and you have to hope that the juror’s sense of morality is able to overcome the cash temptation. $120k is a lot of money and would probably pose a significant moral dilemma for most people in this economy.

    However, if the juror is allowed to keep it after the trial is over, then there’s no downside for the juror to report it. There’s no moral dilemma because they get to keep the cash for doing the right thing. If anything, there’s an incentive for the juror to report it because then the cash is no longer illegal so there’s no longer a criminal risk to keeping it and the prosecution gets evidence for another crime to hit the defense with. The alternative is keeping the cash at the risk of being caught and thrown in jail.

    Edit: tried to rephrase the question to make it a bit clearer.

    • Xhieron
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      446 months ago

      Someone willing to pay a juror a $120k bribe is probably also willing to kill a juror who takes the bag of cash and doesn’t keep their end of the deal.

      Keeping the money and not keeping the deal is a no-win for the juror. Best case scenario, you sleep on your $120k with one eye open for the rest of your stressed out life.

      • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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        346 months ago

        They’re also the kind of people to kill you after you complete your end of the bargain and take the money back.

      • @[email protected]
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        186 months ago

        I mean, is giving the money to the cops in a report, or even giving the money back, much safer? If they’re offering bribe money, they clearly value your cooperation more than the money and so might not be willing to take no for an answer if you try to refuse or give it back in person. I guess with the reporting option, there’s at least the fact that if something happens to you, it’s going to look far more suspicious than if you were just someone the media and law enforcement had never heard of, so whoever gave the bribe risks even worse crimes potentially being tied to them with the murder.

      • @[email protected]
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        86 months ago

        What do you think they’d do to someone who turns the money over and snitches? There’s no available sure win.

    • @[email protected]
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      346 months ago

      That’s why you give the cops one of the $120K bags you were bribed with, and keep the other two.

      What are the bribers going to say, “hey, that’s only a third of what I tried to bribe them with!”…?

      • @[email protected]
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        146 months ago

        Not necessarily. Trump asked his fixer to bring this bag with legit money. Trump will reimburse his lawyer later as legal fees.

        • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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          106 months ago

          Trump will reimburse his lawyer later

          Is he still finding people who fall for this old scam?

    • @Euphorazine
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      46 months ago

      If the juror is allowed to keep the money after the trial if they report it, just means we will have open bribery of jurors.

      “Yes, I got this $100,000 cashier check to vote guilty, so I’m going to vote not guilty to keep the $100,000”

      • @grue
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        96 months ago

        You let them keep it as a reward for doing the right thing and reporting, but you also replace them in the jury.

          • db0
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            96 months ago

            Apparently you can do that already since this juror was removed. Also it sounds expensive with very little reward

            • @Buddahriffic
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              36 months ago

              Not to mention it involves directly implicating yourself in a new crime (or several, since it would be both bribery as well as jury tampering). And it would be more evidence of guilt.

    • @[email protected]
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      26 months ago

      I think the only downside to this is that if I had expendable cash already liquid so no paper trail, and I was a juror, and I wanted the defendant to get in even more trouble, I could claim the cash was a bribe and get it back with no risk. It would also make laundering money easier as any claim of bribery instantly cleans up the source of it. And if the designated grunt does his time and doesn’t talk, it never gets traced back to the source.

    • @librejoe
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      26 months ago

      Easy for me to say over a screen, but if I knew the person was guilty and it was a serious thing, I’d tell them to take that 120k and shove it up their ass, or better yet, do what this person did and call them out on their bullshit tactics.

    • Track_Shovel
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      16 months ago

      It’s the prisoner’s dilemma but one sided, and with bribe money.

    • @[email protected]
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      06 months ago

      That’s you report that they attempted to bribe you with a lesser amount and pocket the difference.

      $100k in money can go a long way in changing an everyday person’s life.

  • mad_asshatter
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    586 months ago

    The juror should have said it was $100,000.

    • @[email protected]
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      486 months ago

      What, you mean this bag of 80k that somebody dropped at my door? No idea where it came from

      • @bazus1
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        396 months ago

        I’m shocked that you’d think that any amount of money, even 60k, would get me to compromise my civic duty.

        • Kaity
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          216 months ago

          40k is only a years salary for me so idk why they thought that would be anywhere near enough.

            • @NegativeLookBehind
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              126 months ago

              Somebody suggested that I’d get some money, but I never did. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m late for an appointment at the Ferrari dealership.

              • @ProIsh
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                66 months ago

                This was all beautiful, thank you everyone that pulled through

              • @w2tpmf
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                36 months ago

                120k is barely a down payment on a Ferrari.

              • @bazus1
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                16 months ago

                apparently our 20k increments played well on Boing Boing . We did it guys!

    • @Iheartcheese
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      236 months ago

      Seriously? You expect me to compromise my morals for 50k?

    • IninewCrow
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      6 months ago

      Or just take the money and still prosecute and never mention the money.

      Someone handed out $120,000? wow, I hope they find that money

      • @MrFappy
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        106 months ago

        I have a feeling that one would be swiftly dispatched in this sort of instance.

      • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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        56 months ago

        The kinds of people that hand you $120,000 in exchange for criminal behavior aren’t the kinds of people to just shrug their shoulders and be okay with you stealing it.

    • @[email protected]
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      46 months ago

      Take it, gaslight yourself that it doesn’t exist, finish the trial, buy a weeks worth of groceries

      • @Death_Equity
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        16 months ago

        I don’t think shopping at Whole Foods would be a good use of that money. The asparagus water just isn’t worth it, you can make it at home.

    • @humorlessrepost
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      6 months ago

      Why assume it didn’t start as $250k before it got to the news?

      • @SacralPlexus
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        26 months ago

        If I was the juror in a case of this scale, with all of the political people involved, I would be scared shitless that it was a setup by cops or some other party. I would assume I had been videoed taking the money and would run immediately to hand over every penny.

    • @[email protected]
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      26 months ago

      I figure that once you admit to someone trying to bribe you, that someone’s finances will probably be investigated, and if it seems like they really gave you bunch more and you lied about the amount, that’s potential trouble for you.

      • @[email protected]
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        16 months ago

        You lied or the guy giving you the money took his percentage.

        Who are you more likely to believe? The one reporting the crime or the one that committed it?

      • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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        16 months ago

        They’re convicted felons for the crime of fraud. Of course they’re going to try to commit more fraud about how much money they offered you.

  • @z00s
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    386 months ago

    In a fraud trial

    Chef’s kiss

  • @Etterra
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    306 months ago

    There should be a law that states that if this happens and you turn them in then you get to keep the money.

  • @[email protected]
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    156 months ago

    Shouldn’t the one person who absolutely should be on the jury be the person reporting a bribery attempt?

    • @[email protected]
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      126 months ago

      No, because they’re automatically biased against the defendant. The goal is no bias, regardless of reason.

        • @[email protected]
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          26 months ago

          Yes.
          Even if I believed someone were innocent, if someone attempted to purchase my vote, I would be personally offended, and immediately view the defendant as untrustworthy. It would bias my judgement.

          The article states that the judge removed the jury member from the case and swapped in an alternate. The judge is also sequestering the jury, so they must spend the remainder of the case in a hotel - hopefully avoiding any other attempts to bias the jury.

          • @[email protected]
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            26 months ago

            Your comment requires elaboration.

            What happened here was jury tampering, and it occurred after jury selection.

            How would jury selection factor in?

      • @Buddahriffic
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        26 months ago

        Personally, I think the bias caused by attempting to bribe a member of the jury would be entirely fair. It should be used as further evidence of guilt in the trial itself. Even if they are innocent of the original charges, they are corrupt and I can’t say I have any problem with removing power from such corruption.

  • @[email protected]
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    126 months ago

    All I know is those horrible people are not guilty. Waiting for my bag of money any moment now.

  • Chozo
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    106 months ago

    Why do outsiders have access to jurors in the first place? Was the jury not sequestered?

    • @[email protected]
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      166 months ago

      Sequestration is difficult for everyone, but it’s most burdensome on the jurors themselves. It’s usually avoided unless absolutely necessary.

  • @ikidd
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    76 months ago

    So the bribe was $240,000, you say?

  • @0110010001100010
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    66 months ago

    The article is light on details around the actual cash itself but I have to wonder if it wasn’t counterfeit. If you are, without any type of conversation, randomly trying to pay off jurors that seems like a lot of real money to just blindly throw at the problem and hope it goes away.

    Even $5k or $10k could be a life-changing amount of money for some people, seems like it would be easier/cheaper to start there (if it’s real) then promise more on a specific outcome.

    It’s not like your average person would be able to tell a real from a fake bill…

  • fmstrat
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    16 months ago

    They’re keeping the jury, that’s a bad idea. Who knows if anyone accepted.